ROBERT COHEN
Following his Royal Festival Hall debut at the age of
12, Robert Cohen subsequently achieved international recognition whilst
still a teenager with a recording of the Elgar Cello Concerto which
earned a silver disc and placed him at the forefront of his musical
generation. He has gone on to consolidate an impressive discography
ranging from solo Bach (and the Schubert Quintet with the Amadeus on
Deutsche Grammophon) to a recent release of the HK Gruber Cello
Concerto under the direction of the composer.
The
creative give-and-take of the concert hall remains Cohen’s first love
however. As a busy performing artist his career takes him to the USA,
Europe, Eastern Europe, Scandinavia, Australia, Japan and the UK. He
has performed with such conductors as Claudio Abbado, Maris Jansons,
Riccardo Muti and Sir Simon Rattle, and he retains a lively enthusiasm
for chamber music (which provides the bedrock of the Charleston Manor
Festival which he has directed since 1989).
Cohen’s
passionate and articulate views on the art of learning, performing and
communicating music have stimulated illuminating masterclasses, and
have been widely broadcast and published. Since 1999 he has been a
Visiting Professor at the Royal Academy of Music. Robert Cohen is also
Professor of Advanced Cello at the Conservatorio della Svizzera
Italiana in Lugano.
As soloist,
conductor and teacher Robert Cohen’s music-making takes him all over
the world; holding, as ‘The Guardian’ observed, audiences “in the palm of his hand”.
He plays the ‘Ex Roser’ cello by David Tecchler. Rome 1723.